Marietje Schaake
@MarietjeSchaake
[email protected] 📩 @stanfordcyber 👾 @StanfordHAI 💻 Columnist @FT 🇪🇺 MEP 2009-2019 📕Author of The Tech Coup 🌎 UN AI Advisory Body
ID:19541556
https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691241173/the-tech-coup 26-01-2009 16:14:07
78,5K Tweet
70,5K Takipçi
24,9K Takip Edilen
Follow People
Important from Marietje Schaake.
It’s twisted & inexplicable that “AI safety” ppl continue to perplex themselves w ill-defined thought experiments focused on the fake far future while AI’s being used by the Israeli military to expedite slaughter now.
ft.com/content/da03f8…
'The decision to not regulate military AI has a human price. The lines between civilian and military uses of AI are blurring, and we have to ask ourselves how meaningful political discussions of AI safety are, if they don’t cover both.' — Marietje Schaake ow.ly/kkEU50Rs24I
The incorrect information dispensed by NYC’s AI-powered chatbot “is a perfect illustration of how premature adoption of new technology...can create costs for governments — and the public — that far outweigh the benefits,” writes D&S’s Aiha Nguyen. thehill.com/opinion/techno…
Why the Military Can’t Trust AI > by my excellent colleague Jacquelyn Schneider and Max Lamparth ↘️ foreignaffairs.com/united-states/…
Important piece by Marietje Schaake (especially as more AI giants jump on the national security AI gravy train):
'We have to ask ourselves how meaningful political discussions of AI safety are, if they don’t cover military uses of the technology.'
ft.com/content/da03f8…
'The decision to not regulate military AI has a human price. Even if they are systematically imprecise, these systems are often given undue trust in military contexts as they are wrongly seen as impartial.' Marietje Schaake ft.com/content/da03f8…
‘We have to ask ourselves how meaningful political discussions of AI safety are, if they don’t cover military uses of the technology’ Marietje Schaake
on.ft.com/49YSlJ6
Winner-takes-most strikes again.
As FT signs licencing deal with Open AI, joining AP, Axel Springer, Le Monde, and Prisa, I think back to how our survey of 300+ digital leaders in news found 35% expected most $$$ from deals would go to big media companies reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/journalism-med…